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The Penny Parker Megapack: 15 Complete Novels

Page 127

by Mildred Benson


  “I trust I’m not inquiring into secrets,” Mr. Emory went on cheerfully. “Fact of the matter is, I might be able to help your father.”

  “I’m sure Dad will want to talk with you.”

  “I’ll look forward to meeting your father. Think you can arrange it?”

  “Why, I suppose so,” Penny said, though with no great enthusiasm. Again she experienced a queer, uneasy feeling. She did not entirely trust Mr. Emory.

  The man smiled and seemed to relax. As the girls arose to leave he tried once more to detain them.

  “See that old fellow down the beach?” he inquired, pointing to an aged man who was picking up objects from the sand with a sharp-pointed stick.

  “Yes, what about him?” Penny asked, turning to stare. “Just an ordinary beachcomber, isn’t he?”

  “I’d not call Old Jake Skagway ordinary,” Mr. Emory corrected. “If you’re really interested in solving the radio station mystery, I’d advise you to keep watch of that rascal.”

  “But why him?” Penny asked.

  “I can’t explain,” Mr. Emory said with finality. “It’s just a tip. Take it or leave it.”

  Yawning, he stretched himself full length on the sand and turned his back to the girls.

  CHAPTER 11

  A MAN OF MYSTERY

  The following day when Penny told her father of Mr. Emory’s desire to meet him, Mr. Parker showed little interest.

  “I’ve no time to waste getting acquainted with strangers,” he said. “Why is the man so eager to know me?”

  “He thinks he may be able to help you locate that hidden radio station.”

  Mr. Parker’s annoyance visibly increased. “Penny,” he said severely, “you’ve evidently been talking out of turn.”

  “I didn’t mean to let him know why you’re at Sunset Beach, Dad. It sort of slipped out.”

  Louise, who was washing the breakfast dishes, spoke quickly.

  “It was my fault,” she insisted. “Penny tried to stop me, but I gave the information before I thought.”

  “Well, it doesn’t matter,” Mr. Parker assured her kindly. “I came here mostly for a vacation. If I should be lucky enough to dig up a few facts about the radio station, well and good. If not, no harm will have been done.”

  “You sent for Jerry to help you?” Penny inquired curiously.

  Mr. Parker shook his head. “No, I knew he was coming, but I didn’t send for him. If I had, I’m afraid the Army wouldn’t have been obliging enough to have filled my order.”

  Penny helped Louise put away the camp dishes and pick up loose papers. It was only eight-thirty but already most of the work had been done. With Louise to help, camping no longer was a burden. Even Mr. Parker seemed to have moments of enjoying the outdoor life.

  “Anyone riding to Sunset Beach with me?” he inquired cheerfully. “I have a date with Jerry this morning.”

  Penny and Louise both wanted to go. They washed at the brook, changed into becoming “town” dresses, and soon were ready.

  At the Crystal Inn, Jerry was not to be found. A clerk explained that the young man had left the hotel a half hour earlier but was expected to return soon.

  “He probably went somewhere for breakfast or a walk,” Mr. Parker remarked, sinking into a comfortable chair. “I’ll wait for him.”

  Penny and Louise loitered in the lobby. Presently Mrs. Deline came from the dining room and Mr. Parker politely arose to greet her. The widow took a chair beside him and they began to chat in an animated way.

  “Let’s get away from here!” Penny muttered to Louise. “I don’t like the scenery.”

  The girls went outside into the warm sunshine. Because the Parker automobile was at the curb they climbed into it and sat watching the sea.

  “Why do you dislike Mrs. Deline so intensely?”Louise presently asked her chum.

  “Because she’s aiming to be my stepmother, that’s why!”

  “Oh, Penny!” Louise laughed outright. “I’m sure you have a mistaken idea about the entire situation. Your father isn’t serious in liking her.”

  “Then he’s certainly developed remarkable talents for acting,” Penny retorted with a sniff. “I wish we’d never come to Sunset Beach.”

  “You’d be willing to forego the mystery?”

  “Who cares about a radio station?” Penny asked crossly. “Dad won’t tell me anything about the case, and probably Jerry won’t either. It seems to be one of those affairs for the experts only.”

  “If I know you, Penny, you’ll manage to get in on the affair,” Louise said, her eyes twinkling.

  Penny turned on the ignition and started the car. “I’m just not interested,” she announced flatly. “Mrs. Deline has taken all the fun out of me. Want to go for a ride?”

  “Where?”

  “Oh, just up the beach.”

  “Isn’t it dangerous to drive on the sand?”

  “Everyone does it at low tide. The sand is hard and firm along this stretch of beach.”

  Louise offered no further objection, so Penny drove slowly away from the hotel. The car rode on silken tires, making only a soft swishing sound as it rolled smoothly over the sand.

  “Oh, this is fun!” Louise cried in delight.

  “We might drive to the lighthouse,” Penny proposed, steering to avoid two bathers who crossed in front of the car.

  Following the curve of the beach, the girls kept on until the sand became so soft that they were afraid to drive farther. The lighthouse was close by. Penny, curious to learn what sort of reception the keeper would accord her on the second visit, proposed to Louise that they call there.

  “If he let Mrs. Deline visit the tower why can’t we?” she argued. “Come along, let’s try to get in!”

  Abandoning the car on the beach, they waded through the dunes, climbed a fence, and ultimately reached the base of the tower. No one seemed to be in evidence. Penny started boldly up the iron steps. However, before she had gone very far, the keeper, Jim McCoy, came out on the platform.

  “Didn’t I tell you no visitors are allowed here?” he called down angrily.

  “I saw a lady come here yesterday!” Penny returned.

  “You must have dreamed it,” retorted the lighthouse keeper. “No visitors allowed. Don’t make me tell you again!”

  Penny retreated, decidedly crushed.

  “You asked for it, kitten,” Louise teased as they walked toward the car. “I don’t blame the keeper for not wanting visitors.”

  “Mrs. Deline was there,” Penny insisted stubbornly. “Why should he deny it?”

  Half way to the car, the girls paused to pick up a few large shells lying in the deep sand. The task became an absorbing one. Before they realized it, the sun was high overhead and their faces were being burned by the direct rays.

  “Let’s go,” Louise urged. “The tide turned a long while ago. We should be returning to the hotel.”

  “Okay,” Penny agreed. She stooped to pick up another shell. As she straightened, she observed an old man in ragged clothing coming down the beach.

  “Lou,” she said in a low tone, “there’s that same man Mr. Emory was telling us about!”

  “The beachcomber?” Louise turned to stare.

  “Yes, and he’s coming this way. Perhaps it might be worth while to watch him.”

  “He’s not seen us yet.”

  Penny glanced about for a hiding place. The only one that offered was a huge sand dune. Pulling Louise along with her, she crouched down out of sight.

  In a moment the old beachcomber came along. He was whistling and seemed to have not a care in the world. His face, viewed at close range, was weather-beaten, his hair uncombed, and his clothing had not been washed in many a day.

  “What’s so mysterious about him?” Louise whispered. “Why did Mr. Emory say he’d bear watching?”

  “Maybe he’s not really a beachcomber,” Penny returned, low. “He may be an Enemy Agent in disguise.”

  “You have Enemy Agent
s on the brain!” Louise chuckled. “Likewise, man-snatching widows.”

  The beachcomber passed within a few feet of the girls. He crossed the courtyard of the lighthouse and was seen to take a trail which led amid the rocks.

  “Lou, perhaps he’s going to one of the caves!”Penny cried. “You know Mr. Emory said this locality is honeycombed with them.”

  “Let him go,” Louise answered indifferently. “It’s lunch time and I’m hungry.”

  “Your appetite will have to wait. I’m going to follow that man!”

  “Oh, Penny.”

  “But this may be important.”

  “And it may be just another of your so-called bright ideas,” Louise retorted. “Well, lead on, and let’s get it over with.”

  The beachcomber already had disappeared amid the mass of piled-up rock farther back from shore. Penny had marked the locality well with her eye. She was able to lead Louise to the place where he had vanished.

  “See, there’s a well-worn trail,” she indicated triumphantly. “He must have taken it.”

  They followed the path, and a moment later caught a fleeting glimpse of the beachcomber. At times the trail was so narrow that the girls barely could squeeze between the rocks. Wind whistled around the cliffs, whipping hair and blowing skirts.

  Unexpectedly, Penny, who was in the lead, came to the low entranceway of a cave.

  “He must have gone in there!” she declared excitedly. “Listen!”

  From deep within the cave the girls could hear a strange sound.

  “Rushing water!” Louise said in awe. “The Cave must have a waterfall or an underground river.”

  “We’ll soon know.” Penny started into the cave only to have Louise clutch at her hand.

  “Don’t be silly, Penny. We have no flashlight.”

  “But we can’t let that beachcomber get away. We want to learn what he does.”

  “I can bear up without knowing.”

  “Well, I can’t,” Penny announced with equal firmness.

  “But it may be dangerous. Let’s go back to the hotel and get Jerry or your father.”

  Penny hesitated, then shook her head. “You stay here if you like, Lou,” she replied. “I’m going inside.”

  Before her chum could detain her, she stooped low and crawled into the narrow, dark tunnel.

  CHAPTER 12

  CAUGHT BY THE TIDE

  Unwilling to be left behind, Louise followed her chum into the dark cavern. Once she and Penny were well beyond the yawning mouth of the cave, they could not see a foot ahead of them. Guided by the sound of rushing water, they groped their way along a damp wall.

  “This is awful!” Louise whispered nervously. “Let’s turn back.”

  Penny might have yielded to her chum’s coaxing but at that moment the tunnel broadened out and became lighter. Directly ahead a series of steps led down to a lower room of the cave.

  “This place must be safe enough or steps wouldn’t have been built here,” she whispered. “Don’t be nervous, Lou. We may discover something important.”

  Louise muttered that they were more likely to break their necks. However, she cautiously followed Penny down the rock-hewn steps. Half way down, they both paused. From below came a weird sound.

  “What was that?” Louise whispered.

  “It sounded for all the world like the note of a pipe organ!” Penny observed. “There it is again—a different tone this time.”

  Noiselessly the girls moved on down the steps. Ahead of them they now could see a moving light which undoubtedly was a flash lantern carried by the beachcomber. Drawing closer, they saw the man himself. In the great cavern his shadow appeared grotesque and huge.

  “What is he doing?” Louise whispered in awe.

  The man was unaware that he had been followed. He stood in the center of the great chamber, gazing with wrapt expression at the stalagmites which rose in strange formations from the cave floor. The girls could hear him muttering to himself. At the risk of being seen they moved closer.

  “Music! Music!” the old man mumbled. “Talk about your pipe organs! They ain’t in it with this!”

  He held a long stick in his hand and with it began to explore the row of stalagmites, striking them one by one, at first with a slow tempo and then faster and faster. The weird sounds echoed and reached through the galleries of the cavern.

  “Pretty!” the old man prattled. “It’s the music o’Heaven. There ain’t no music to equal it.”

  Again the beachcomber struck the stalagmites, listening raptly while the sounds died slowly away.

  “Come on, Penny,” Louise urged, tugging at her hand. “Let’s get out of here. That old goof has lost his buttons.”

  Decidedly crestfallen, Penny permitted herself to be pulled along the passage and up the steps. As the girls groped their way to the cave’s mouth, they still could hear the weird echoing tones.

  “That was a good joke on you!” Louise teased. “You thought you were going to find a hidden radio station!”

  “Well, we did find a cave,” Penny said defensively.

  “We didn’t exactly discover it,” Louise amended. “This must be Crystal Cave. Seemingly that old beachcomber regards it as his own personal property.”

  “Mr. Emory certainly gave us a wrong steer. A mysterious character, my eye!”

  “You’ll admit that the old fellow is interesting,”Louise laughed. “However, I doubt he’ll warrant much attention from the FBI.”

  “All right, laugh,” Penny retorted grimly. “You think my detective efforts are a joke anyway.”

  “No, I don’t, Penny. But I will say I doubt you’ll have success tracing a hidden radio station. After all, it’s a problem that has the State authorities baffled. Not to mention Uncle Sam’s Army.”

  The girls stepped from the cave out into the brilliant sunshine. Gazing toward the sea, they were amazed to see how high the tide had risen. Giant waves were washing very close to the Parker automobile left on the beach.

  “Ye fishes!” Penny exclaimed in horror. “I forgot all about the car!”

  “And the tide’s coming in fast!”

  “The Point will be cut off in a few more minutes!”Penny added, recalling Mr. Emory’s warning. “We’ll have to travel, and travel fast!”

  Scrambling down from the rocks, the girls plunged through the dunes to the beach. A wind was blowing and the sea had an angry look.

  “If just one wave strikes the car, the wheels will sink in the sand, and then we’ll be in it!” Penny cried.

  With increasing alarm she noted that sand was damp within a foot of the rear wheels. And as she jerked open the car door, a greedy wave nipped again at the rubber.

  “We’ll soon be out of here,” Louise said encouragingly.

  Penny stepped on the starter and to her relief the motor caught instantly. In great haste she turned the car around, circling away from the inrushing sea.

  “Careful!” Louise warned. “The sand is dreadfully soft this far up shore.”

  Too late Penny realized the same thing. She could feel the car starting to bog down. The motor began to labor. Then the car stalled completely.

  “We’re stuck!” she gasped.

  Both girls sprang out to look at the wheels. Their spirits sank. On one side, front and rear tires were bogged deep in sand.

  “Start the engine again!” Louise urged desperately. “I’ll try to push.”

  Penny obeyed, but her chum’s puny strength made not the slightest impression upon the car. It could not be moved a foot. The spinning wheels only drove deeper and deeper into the sand.

  “What shall we do?” Louise asked helplessly. She turned to stare at the incoming sea. Each wave was breaking a little closer to the car.

  “This place will be under in another twenty minutes,”Penny calculated. “Even if the car isn’t washed away, the salt water will ruin it. How did we ever get into such a mess?”

  “Just by being careless. If only we weren’t so far fro
m the hotel!”

  “I’ll run to the lighthouse,” Penny decided desperately. “Maybe the keeper will help us.”

  Both girls were badly frightened, not for their own safety, but because they feared that the car would be damaged beyond repair. Once the waves began to strike it, it would sink deeper and deeper into the sand. Salt water would corrode all of the bright chromium.

  “We’ve no time to waste!” Penny cried, darting away.

  The girls plunged through the sand drifts to the lighthouse. Evidently the keeper already had observed their plight, for he was standing on the upper platform peering down into the courtyard.

  “Our car is stuck in the sand!” Penny shouted. “Can you help us get it out?”

  “No, I can’t,” the keeper answered gruffly. “You should have watched the tide.”

  “There’s no one else to help us,” Penny pleaded. “Just a little push—”

  “I’m forbidden to leave my post.”

  “Then will you telephone to the Inn? Or to a garage?”

  “I could ’phone but it wouldn’t do any good,” the keeper said reluctantly. “Your car will be under water before a tow-car could get here.”

  Exasperated by the man’s unwillingness to help, Louise and Penny ran back to the car. Already waves were lapping against the rear wheels. The situation seemed hopeless.

  “Shall I try to push again?” Louise asked.

  “It wouldn’t do any good. We’re not strong enough.” In desperation, Penny’s gaze wandered down the deserted shore. Suddenly she saw a lone fisherman who was wading through the surf. She recognized him as George Emory.

  “He’ll help us!” she cried confidently.

  The girls shouted Mr. Emory’s name. Apparently he heard, for he turned his head quickly. Their plight, they thought, must be instantly evident, but Mr. Emory did not seem to comprehend. He waved his hand as if in friendly greeting, and then, reeling in his fish line, turned and walked away from them.

  CHAPTER 13

  A HIDDEN PACKAGE

  “Why, Mr. Emory doesn’t understand!” Penny cried, aghast. “Can’t he see that we’re stuck here with the tide rolling in?”

  The girls shouted again and again. If the man heard, he gave no sign.

 

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